MASS DEMONSTRATIONS ACCUSE GOVERNMENT OF AUTHORITARIANISM AND CORRUPTION
~ from ANRed ~
Tensions have surged in Peru after interim president José Jerí Oré declared a
30-day state of emergency in Lima and the neighbouring province of Callao,
citing what he called a “crisis of public security”, days after police
repression left one young demonstrator dead.
The state of emergency suspends the right to assembly and allows joint patrols
by the police and armed forces. It also restricts visits to prisons and permits
warrantless searches. More than ten million people are affected in Lima and
Callao alone. Civil liberties groups warn that the decree amounts to the
militarisation of public life, aimed less at crime than at quelling dissent.
Jerí, appointed by the congressional coalition that forced out president Dina
Boluarte earlier this month, justified the measure as “the beginning of change”
in tackling violent crime. Yet critics note that it follows an eruption of
street protests rejecting his unelected government. Peru has cycled through
seven presidents since 2016, a sign of the profound political and institutional
crisis gripping the country.
Last week, thousands marched through Lima and other cities to denounce what they
describe as a “mafioso and authoritarian pact”. Witnesses report that police
opened fire on demonstrators near Plaza Francia, killing 24-year-old rapper and
community organiser Eduardo Mauricio Ruíz Sáenz, known as Trvko. According to
eyewitnesses, an undercover officer fired several shots after being confronted
by protesters. The National Human Rights Coordinator confirmed 15 people
injured, including four journalists, while the Health Ministry acknowledged one
death and three critical cases.
Public outrage has mounted ahead of a new national mobilisation called for today
(Saturday 25 October) by the youth collective Generación Z, demanding justice
for Trvko and the lifting of the emergency decree. The demonstration will again
converge on Plaza Francia, while pro-government groups have announced a
counter-rally in the Campo de Marte park.
The government’s response has been unapologetic. Interior minister Vicente
Tiburcio, a former counter-insurgency officer under the Fujimori regime, denied
police responsibility and branded student protesters “violentists”. Meanwhile,
Jerí used social media to praise the “firmness” of the police while accusing
demonstrators of seeking chaos.
Despite the repression, public anger shows no sign of abating. “They are killing
our youth to defend a corrupt pact,” read one banner carried through Lima’s
centre this week. For many Peruvians, the murder of Trvko has come to symbolise
the enduring impunity of a political class clinging to power through force.
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Machine edit. Photo: José Francisco Rubio / Contranoticia.pe
The post Peru: State of emergency after young rapper killed in protests appeared
first on Freedom News.
Tag - demonstrations
WITHOUT THE PROMISE OF A PEOPLE NEAR REVOLT, DEMONSTRATIONS THAT INCONVENIENCE
NO-ONE CAN EASILY BE BRUSHED ASIDE
~ Sourdough ~
On June 14 across the US and several other countries, protests took place under
the title of No Kings. Organised by the 50501 movement in opposition to the
Trump regime, UK events took place under the conciliatory title No Tyrants. The
protests were a thoroughly peaceful affair, with great care taken not to upset
the movement’s broad appeal in vague opposition to Trump and his policies.
Compared to the crackdown on protests for Gaza, and the violent suppression of
recent mass actions against ICE in Los Angeles and elsewhere, No Kings remained
curiously unmolested. Turnout was widespread, with estimates of 4-6 million in
attendance.
Yet it all came and went to little effect—the protests were more performance
than substance. For all the numbers there was zero movement, no demands. Without
a second thought of the dissonance, protesters waved the stars and stripes of
the regime that oppresses them, deports their neighbours, and steals their
futures—while democratic party organisers handed out fliers to vote in some
supposedly upcoming election. There was immense fraternisation with the police.
Even the messaging in opposition to monarchy was muddled. For all the mass
demonstration of people’s power, it was enfeebled, unsure of itself.
Operating as it is now—a weakened cry from within the system, propelled and
backed by the democratic party—No Kings protests are scarcely likely to
accomplish anything. Quite telling is the absence of these new swathes of
protesters from anything to do with resisting the genocide in Palestine. After
allowing Gaza and its inhabitants to be the testing ground for state repression,
they are now displeased to find its results back home. The plan for protests on
July 4 protests, American Independence Day, consisted un-ironically of the usual
celebration activities. Even as the fascist regime encroaches across all realms
of life, liberal resistance still takes the form of a barbecue.
It is easy to see why. As permitted opposition, both figuratively and literally,
the group behind No Kings, 50501, supposedly emerged from the grassroots on
Reddit before being propped up by previously existing liberal pressure groups
such as Political Revolution, Indivisible, and the remnants of the 2017 Women’s
March. Building on the momentum of previous mobilisations such as the widespread
Hands Off protests, No Kings continues the feckless and spineless tradition of
liberal ‘activism’: an absence of values concentrated into appealing to the
widest number of people possible. Defanged from infancy, 50501 and movements
like it offer a chance for those uncomfortable with truly confronting power to
glimpse a return to the comfortable, playing into the narrative of peaceful
progress without truly threatening power.
But what is a protest if not a threat against power? A protest is the greatest
threat there is, it is a promise of a people near revolt. When there is no
threat behind a protest, when it ceases to inconvenience anyone, it can easily
be brushed aside. By proudly professing unconditional non-violence, violence is
left within the sole domain of the state, which commits it every day to maintain
its control. Refusing to disrupt property lets the capitalist system know that
the people are forever their property. Refusing to fight lets the fascists know
there will be little meaningful resistance to their carefully propagated chaos.
Consequently, the vast majority is kept eternally ashamed and embarrassed to
express its outrage through any material method, as if mere appeals to power
would work. There is no respect to be won from the state. There will never be a
protest peaceful enough for it. Power only respects other power, and when such
vast displays of people’s power are focused into exactly nothing, it rests
easily and securely. Rather than allowing us to petition the existing structures
of power for concessions or reforms, protests should be an opportunity for the
people to flex their collective power. By allowing the state to set the rules of
resistance through the lens of an ever-shrinking legality, we ensure our
opposition is controlled into no opposition at all.
It is not enough to resist or be against something. Liberals are opposed to
Trump but they are for scarcely little. The world they propose is almost no
different to that of fascists, albeit with social niceties left intact. We have
to stand for something, not just against something. By declaring our principles,
by declaring boldly our fight for liberation, it will become all too clear who
we stand against. Liberals hold no future beyond the past, so it is left to us
to build something new.
We are not fighting against Trump the individual, we are fighting for a
stateless, classless, moneyless society in which humanity can be free. We must
work to demonstrate an alternative for the people who declare there is no
alternative. Any movement seeking to resist fascism must take direct action to
disrupt it, as well as demonstrating what a better world can be like.
No such world can be built within the constraints of the system. To threaten
power is to move beyond its possibilities.
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Photo: No Kings protest in Dallas, Texas. Brenden M. Rogers, Wikimedia Commons
CC BY-SA 4.0
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